This is a list of the heaviest people recorded, The table includes each person’s name, peak weight, their birth date, and years of life. This list is limited to those individuals who weighed over 450Â kg (990Â lb; 70Â st 12Â lb).

Name

Country

Sex

B.

D.

Height

Peak weight

Peak BMI (kg/m2)

Comments

1.Jon Brower Minnoch

United States

M

1941

1983

1.85Â m (6Â ft 1Â in)

635Â kg (1,400Â lb; 100Â st 0Â lb)

186

His weight loss of approximately 419Â kg (920Â lb; 66Â st 0Â lb) is the largest ever documented.

2. Khalid bin Mohsen Shaari

Saudi Arabia

M

living

610Â kg (1,300Â lb; 96Â st 1Â lb)

Lost 150Â kg (330Â lb; 23Â st 9Â lb) as of November 11, 2013 after King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia ordered him hospitalized in August 2013.

3. Manuel Uribe

Mexico

M

1965

living

1.96Â m (6Â ft 5Â in)

597Â kg (1,320Â lb; 94Â st 0Â lb)

155

After worldwide media attention in January 2006, with help from doctors and nutritionists he lost over 225Â kg (500Â lb; 35Â st 6Â lb) over a two-year period. As of February 2012, he weighs 200 kg (440 lb).

Had the largest waist ever in circumference at 9Â ft 11Â in (3.02Â m).

6. Rosalie Bradford

United States

F

1943

2006

1.69Â m (5Â ft 7Â in)

544Â kg (1,200Â lb; 85Â st 9Â lb)

190

Holds the Guinness World Record for most weight lost by a woman, 415.9Â kg (917Â lb; 65Â st 7Â lb).

7. Michael Hebranko

United States

M

1953

2013

Over 500Â kg (1,100Â lb; 78Â st 10Â lb)

8. Patrick Deuel

United States

M

1962

living

1.70Â m (5Â ft 7Â in)

486Â kg (1,070Â lb; 76Â st 7Â lb)

168

9. Robert Earl Hughes

United States

M

1926

1958

485Â kg (1,070Â lb; 76Â st 5Â lb)

10.Mayra Rosales

United States

F

1980

living

470Â kg (1,000Â lb; 74Â st 0Â lb)

As of 2013 Rosales had lost an estimated 800 lb].

11. Kenneth Brumley

United States

M

1968

living

469Â kg (1,030Â lb; 73Â st 12Â lb)

12. Mills Darden

United States

M

1799

1857

2.3Â m (7Â ft 7Â in)

463Â kg (1,020Â lb; 72Â st 13Â lb)

87.5

Â 1. Jon Brower Minnoch

Jon Brower Minnoch (1941 – 1983) of Bainbridge Island, WA; 6 ft 1 in, estimated as weighing “probably more than” 1400 lbs in 1979, at which point it took 13 people just to roll him over in bed. Minnoch, like many of the heaviest people, suffered from massive edema: his weight was augmented by at least 900 lbs of fluid at its peak. The former taxi driver had always been unusually heavy, reaching 400 lbs in 1963, 700 lbs in 1966, and 975 lbs in 1976, but he claimed to have been in no way handicapped by his size until a 500-calorie diet sapped his muscle strength and left him at the brink of death. Subsequent hospitalization brought him down to 476 lbs in 1981, mostly through the loss of 12 to 14 pounds of fluid per week. He was readmitted later that year after regaining 200 lbs in seven days. Although physicians at University Hospital in Seattle persisted in treating him with a 1,200-calorie diet, he weighed about 800 lbs at the time of his death. Other details of his physical condition were withheld from the press. Minnoch was the father of two children by his 110-lb wife, Jeannette.

2.Â Khalid bin Mohsen Shaari

According to the official spokesman for Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Health, Shaari was due to arrive in Riyadh either later Monday or on Tuesday. Pictures showed a fork-lift truck lifting him in is bed. The spokesman said Shaari is aged between 18 and 20.He will be treated at the King Fahd Medical City, and undergo a series of dietary and physical programs in order to help him lose weight, the spokesman said. Although surgery is not scheduled at the moment, the Ministry of Health says it has not been ruled out. Special beds and trolleys have been made for him.

Manuel Uribe (born June 11, 1965) is a man from Monterrey, Nuevo LeÃ³n, Mexico, notable for suffering from morbid obesity to one of the greatest extents known in recorded history. After reaching a peak weight of around 597 kg (1,320 lb) and having been unable to leave his bed since 2001, Uribe lost approximately 181 kg (400 lb) (one third of his body weight) with the help of doctors and nutritionists, and by following the Zone diet. Uribe drew worldwide attention when he appeared on the Televisa television network in January 2006, but turned down offers for gastric bypass surgery in Italy.

Uribe has also been featured on The World’s Heaviest Man, a television documentary about his bedridden life and attempts to overcome his obesity. By October 26, 2008, Uribe had reduced his weight to 360 kg (790 lb). His efforts to overcome his morbid obesity continue. As of February 2012, he weighs 200 kg (440 lb).

Carol Ann Yager (January 26, 1960 â€“ July 18, 1994) was one of the most severely obese people in history. She has the record as the heaviest woman ever.
Guinness’s female record holder, Rosalie Bradford’s weight loss took over 1 year (420 lbs. in the first year), and she underwent at least five surgical sessions to remove tissue during that time.

When Yager died in 1994 at the age of 34, she weighed about 1200 lbs (544 kg), and was 5′ 7″ (170 cm) in height. Bizarre magazine reported that she was estimated to have been more than 5′ wide (152 cm), although this measurement has not been verified by Yager’s medical team or family members. Shortly before her death, however, she was able to fit through her custom-built 48″ (121 cm) wide front door. Undocumented information from firefighters and rescue personnel of the Beecher Fire Department stated that they had to remove the picture window in the front room of her house to get her body out when she died. Published reports quoted her then-boyfriend as stating that he estimated her peak weight at about 1600 pounds (727 kg), but when questioned about this estimate, Yager’s doctor declined comment.

5. Walter Hudson

Walter Hudson (c. 1944 in Brooklyn, NY â€“ Dec 24, 1991) of Hempstead, New York was the fourth most obese human in medical history. He also holds the Guinness World Record for the largest waist. It measured 119 inches (300 cm) in 1987 when he was at his peak weight of 1,197 pounds (85.5 st; 543 kg). Hudson described his average daily diet as consisting of two boxes of sausages, 1 pound (0.45 kg) of bacon, 12 eggs, a loaf of bread, four hamburgers and four double cheeseburgers, eight large portions of fries, three ham steaks or two chickens, four baked potatoes, four sweet potatoes, four heads of broccoli, most of a large cake, and additional snacks. He also drank an average of 18 U.S. quarts (17 liters) of soda every day.
Walter Hudson died of a heart attack on December 24, 1991, at age 46. He weighed 1,125 pounds (80.4 st; 510 kg) at the time, and removal of his body required rescue workers to cut a 4 by 6 foot (1.2 by 1.8 m) hole in his bedroom wall By the Hempstead Fire Dept. He was buried in a specially-constructed, steel-reinforced coffin that was 54 inches (1.4 m) wide, 40 inches (1.0 m) deep, and 88 inches (2.2 m) long.

6. Rosalie Bradford

Rosalie Bradford (August 27, 1943 â€“ November 29, 2006) holds the Guinness World Record for most weight lost by a woman.
In her early twenties she met a man and they were married. The couple eventually had a son. Bradford found herself staying home with their son and cooking a lot. Her weight continued to accelerate uncontrollably, as did her appetite. She eventually tried several diets and joined Weight Watchers with little success.

Finally, after a blood infection landed her in the hospital, Bradford gave up on exercise altogether when the necessary bed rest allowed for her weight gain to accelerate. She remained immobile for eight years. She reached a peak weight of 1,199 lb (544 kg) in January 1987. In 1988, she became so depressed and frustrated that she attempted to commit suicide with painkillers, although, due to her weight, these only made her sleep for a couple of days.
She focused on her diet and stuck to Simmonsâ€™s plan. After a year she had dropped 420 lb (190 kg). Eventually she got some more outside help from a physiotherapist and soon her weight dropped to 500 lb (226 kg), a total weight loss of 699 lb (317 kg). Bradford persisted with her weight-loss plan and eventually reduced her weight to under 300 lb (136 kg), claiming a total weight loss of 917 lb (416 kg).The lymphatic system in her legs was damaged in one of five surgeries to remove excess skin left by her weight loss.

Bradford appeared on the Channel 4 television programme BodyShock giving advice to Patrick Deuel.The episode was first broadcast in August 2007.Rosalie Bradford died on November 29, 2006 at a hospital in Lakeland[2] (near her Auburndale, Florida home). She was 63 years old, and was survived by her husband Robert Bradford and son Robbie. She continues to hold the world record for having lost the most weight by a woman.

7. Michael Hebranko

Michael Hebranko (May 14, 1953 â€“ July 25, 2013) was the heaviest man in the world and suffered from an extreme case of morbid obesity.After a stay at the St. Lukeâ€™s Hospital in New York, he dropped his weight from 411 kg (910 lb) to 90 kg (200 lb) and waist size from 290 cm (110 in) to 91 cm (36 in) in 19 months with the help of the dieting and exercise coach Richard Simmons and was recorded in the Guinness Book of World Records for the highest recorded weight loss in 1990. He lost some of this weight from surgical removal of fat. He then toured the United States lecturing about his experiences and advocating dieting and exercise and appeared in infomercials promoting Richard Simmons.He also appeared on TV talk shows such as The Howard Stern Show and the British chat show Wogan in 1990.
However, over the next seven years, his weight increased to 453 kg (1,000 lb) and he had to be repeatedly hospitalized to the Brookhaven Rehabilitation and Health Care Center.In June 1999, Hebranko was at his peak weight of 500 kg (1,100 lb), before again undergoing a massive weight loss and dropping to 458 pounds. As of March 2012, he resided in Staten Island, New York and weighed 550 lbs. He died on July 25th, 2013.

8.Â patrick deuel

Patrick D. Deuel (born 28 March 1962), was one of the fattest people in the world. He was the subject of the documentary “Half Ton Man” in Channel Four’s BodyShock series,in which Rosalie Bradford gave advice after achieving a record-breaking weight loss of 410 kilograms (900 lb).Born in Grand Island, Nebraska, United States, Deuel is a former restaurant manager. At one point, he had not left his house (in Valentine), or even his bed, in 7 years. He stands at 177.5 cm (5 ft 10 in). At his peak he weighed 1,126 pounds (510.75 kg); at the time, the only scale that could be used to weigh him was a livestock scale.

He was so enormous that his bedroom wall had to be cut out to extract him from his home. Then, he was rushed to a Sioux Falls, South Dakota hospital in an ambulance with extra-wide doors and a ramp-and-winch system that had to be dispatched from Denver.Gastric bypass surgery was thought to be his best chance for permanent weight loss. A second operation removed a mass of fat and skin hanging from his midsection.After 12 months, Patrick lost 260 kilograms (570 lb).After leaving the hospital, Patrick lost even more weight, reaching 170 kilograms (370 lb), a notable 318 kilograms (700 lb) loss.

9. Robert Earl Hughes

Robert Earl Hughes (4 June 1926 â€“ 10 July 1958) was, during his lifetime, the heaviest human being recorded in the history of the world.Hughes was born in Baylis, Illinois, in 1926. At the age of six, he weighed about 92 kilograms (200 lb) at ten, he weighed 171 kilograms (380 lb). His excessive weight was attributed to a malfunctioning pituitary gland. His chest was measured at 3.15 metres (10.3 ft), and he weighed an estimated 486 kilograms (1,070 lb) at his heaviest.

During his adult life, Hughes made guest appearances at carnivals and fairs; plans to appear on the Ed Sullivan television program were announced but never came about. On July 10, 1958, Hughes contracted a case of measles, which soon developed into uremia, resulting in his death in Bremen, Indiana, United States; he was 32 years old.He is often said to have been buried in a piano case. This error stems from a sentence that appeared in successive editions of the Guinness Book of World Records, which read, “He was buried in a coffin the size of a piano case.” His headstone notes that he was the world’s heaviest man at a confirmed 1,041 pounds (472 kg).

10. Mayra Rosales

Mayra Lizbeth Rosales (born 1980) has been recorded as one of the fattest living people in the world. At her heaviest, she weighed 470 kg (1,036 lb) but currently weighs an estimated 91 kg (200 lb). She came to prominence in March 2008 when she was accused of the murder of her two year old nephew. In 2011, she was acquitted of all charges.

In 2013, Rosales stated she had lost 800 pounds on the Spanish-language tv show SÃ¡bado Gigante. She also appeared on Anderson Cooper in 2012 to discuss the changes that she had made